Author
Topic: entrance feeder (Read 3595 times)

can anyone tell me how, or show me a picture of a bordman entrance feeder so I can see how it works I have a general idea but am not sure since all the pictures just show a top view and I dont know how the bees approach it walk ,fly, or standing on something etc i would verymuch appreciate it

I don't have a picture but, the jar sits upside down on this feeder . There is room between the lid of jar and the bottom of the feeder. The feeder slips into the entrance of the hive where the bees can enter into the feeder crawl under the jar and get the juice.

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:rainbowflower: Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak. :rainbowflower:

Here is a bordman entrance feeder. Although I do agree with Michael that they encourage robbing. More so in the spring than in the fall. If you want an inexpensive feeder, try a 1 gal. pickle jar with tiny holes punched in the top on shims over the vent hole of your inner cover. Place an empty deep box around it and then the outer cover and voila!

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By the rude bridge that arched the floodTheir flag to Aprils breeze unfurledHere once the embattled farmers stoodAnd fired the shot heard round the world-Emerson

I have entrace feeders michael and have no problems. I only have 2 hives right now and this is the only year I am using the entrace feeders. Later this year I am getting hive top feeders so when I get more hives then I wont have robbing. What I am saying is robbing is not a big problem with entrace feeders unless you have alot of hives competing for nectar sorces. I feed both them the same amount and always make shure they have syrup so they never fight, bye :D

I used entrance feeders last year with no problem, but I only had two hives, too, and both were getting syrup.

For this year, I'm trying frame feeders with floats. The ones without float just drowned bees, even with the "laddered" walls. I tried putting in corks and paint sticks, but that didn't work. So the floats might not, either. We'll see...

Anonymous

Go to your local pizza joint and ask for the glass gallon jars. I have two places that call me about every two weeks when they have a box of four for me all washed and every thing for free. Olives and peppers come in them. I punch two 1/16 inch holes in them and set them right on top of the hives inter cover hole then place an empty deep around them with the outer cover on top.

I also use self modified frame feeders, I installed floats cut from a short scrap chunks of 2x4 then drilled 3/8 inch holes in the floats also place blocks across the top in two places to stop the bulging, they work great, but I only have two of them. I have heard all the yelling about them taking up room in the hive. Read above I use an empty deep to surround my pickle jars so whats the beef there. I can place at least 6 in a deep I think an am thinking of ordering a bunch of them just to place in a deep above the girls for warm winter days.